Thiamine

Thiamine

Generic Name

Thiamine

Mechanism

  • Cofactor for enzymatic reactions: Acts as the active form, thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP), in key metabolic enzymes:
  • Pyruvate dehydrogenase – links glycolysis to the citric acid cycle.
  • α‑Ketoglutarate dehydrogenase – essential for oxidative decarboxylation in mitochondria.
  • Transketolase – facilitates the non‑oxidative phase of the pentose‑phosphate pathway, maintaining redox balance.
  • Neuroprotection: Adequate TPP ensures neuronal energy production and protects against ischemic damage; deficiency leads to demyelination and axonal degeneration.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterDetails
AbsorptionOral: ~70 % after 200 mg, reduced with high doses or in the presence of food. Parenteral: 100 % bioavailability.
DistributionWidely distributed in extracellular fluid; limited crossing of the blood‑brain barrier (reduced in disorder). Half‑life: < 3 h; accumulates in plasma with repeated dosing.
MetabolismPhosphorylated intracellularly to TPP; dephosphorylated by thiamine pyrophosphatases.
ExcretionPrimarily renal; 90 % unmetabolized excreted in urine. Reduced clearance in renal impairment prolongs half‑life.

Indications

  • Deficiency prevention: Chronic alcoholism, malnutrition, bariatric surgery, prolonged parenteral nutrition lacking thiamine.
  • Deficiency treatment: Beriberi (wet/dry), Wernicke encephalopathy, Wernicke‑Korsakoff syndrome, *SMA type 1* (rare), and certain cases of refractory seizures linked to thiamine deficiency.
  • Adjunctive therapy: Diabetic neuropathy, myocardial ischemia (historical use), and septic shock in select protocols.

Contraindications

  • Contraindications: None formally documented; use caution in severe renal impairment to avoid prolonged accumulation.
  • Warnings:
  • Rapid IV supplementation can trigger Wernicke’s encephalopathy recurrence (rare if adequate pre‑emptive dosing used).
  • Drug interactions: Attenuated effect of ketorolac when supplemented orally; potential interference with metformin metabolism (minimal).
  • Renal dysfunction: Monitor excretion; adjust dose accordingly.

Dosing

SettingDoseRouteFrequency
Adults for deficiency100–200 mg IV/IMIV/IM3× daily for 3–7 days, then maintenance
Maintenance post‑recovery50–100 mgIV/IM1× daily
Oral prophylaxis50 mgOral1× daily
Parenteral nutrition supplementation1.5–3 mg/kg BSAContinuous infusion24 h daily

Tip: For Wernicke encephalopathy, start with 200 mg IV three times daily for 3 days, then 100 mg IV or IM 3× daily until recovery.

Adverse Effects

Adverse EffectIncidenceNotes
Allergic reaction (rash, urticaria)RareMonitor IV infusion rate; pre‑medicate if history of reactions.
HeadacheLowOften transient, resolves with continued doses.
HypotensionRare, IVSlow infusion rate, monitor vitals.
Severe hypoglycemiaVery rareIn patients on insulin or oral hypoglycemics, due to enhanced glucose utilization.
Fluid overloadRare in high‑dose IVSafeguard in heart failure patients.

Monitoring

  • Clinical: Improvement of neuropathic pain, muscle weakness, cardiac output, or neurocognitive status.
  • Laboratory:
  • Serum or plasma thiamine levels (if available) before and after therapy.
  • CBC and electrolytes (for high‑dose IV groups).
  • Renal function tests when dosing in CKD.
  • Imaging (for Wernicke encephalopathy): MRI may show characteristic thalamic lesions; reassess after 1–2 weeks of therapy.

Clinical Pearls

  • Water‑solubility means excess thiamine is rapidly excreted – no need for a loading dose in healthy individuals, but high doses are safe for severe deficiency.
  • Oral vs. IV: Oral bioavailability diminishes >200 mg due to saturation; therefore, for acute deficiency, IV/IM is preferred.
  • Bariatric patients often miss not only thiamine but also other B‑vitamins – include this vitamin in routine supplementation protocols.
  • Intravenous thiamine can paradoxically *trigger* neurological improvement even after prolonged deficiency, but start early to avoid neurogenic shock.
  • Check for hidden alcoholism in unexplained beriberi/sepsis protocols; often the underlying cause is undiagnosed alcohol use disorder.
  • In sepsis scoring, low thiamine is associated with worse outcomes; consider early supplementation in high‑risk ICU patients.
  • Exogenous pyruvate (e.g., in metabolic acidosis) competes with thiamine for transporters; be mindful if giving both concomitantly.

Key Takeaway: Thiamine is a low‑risk, high‑yield supplement that corrects a spectrum of deficiency syndromes—from subtle neuropathy to catastrophic Wernicke encephalopathy—when dosed appropriately by weight, route, and disease severity.

Medical & AI Content Disclaimers
Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

AI Content Disclaimer: Some definitions may be AI-generated and may contain inaccuracies. Always verify with authoritative medical references.

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